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Nursing Rural America : Perspectives From the Early 20th Century.

""Each chapter depicts nurses facing and overcoming a multitude of challenges as they addressed the medical needs of rural Americans. Because of their spirit of acceptance and community cooperation, their outcomes were remarkable: fully immunized communities, a decrease in mortality rates,...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: John Kirchgessner PhD, RN
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Springer Publishing Company, 2014.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Title; Copyright; Contents; Contributors; Foreword; Preface; Notes; Share Nursing Rural America: Perspectives From the Early 20th Century; Chapter 1: Town and Country Nursing: Community Participation and Nurse Recruitment; American Red Cross Rural Nursing Service (1912 to 1913); The First Year; Community Participation; Access to Care; The Work; Additional Education for Rural Practice; Insufficient Workforce; Town and Country Nursing Service (1913 to 1918); Bureau of Public Health Nursing (1918 to 1932) and Public Health Nursing and Home Hygiene and Care of the Sick (1932 to 1948).
  • Insufficient Number of Qualified Rural Public Health NursesConcluding Years of the Arc Rural Public Health Nursing Service; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 2: Public Nursing in Rural Wisconsin: Stretched Beyond Health Instruction; The First County Nurses; Defining the Work of the County Nurse; Nurse-Physician Relationships; The Reality of Budgetary Constraints; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 3: School Nursing in Virginia: Hookworm, Tooth Decay, and Tonsillectomies; Origins of School Nursing; Rural Schools; Advances in School Health; Hookworm and Sanitary Surveys; Transportation and Distances.
  • Specialty ClinicsGaining Access to Families; Financial Barriers; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 4: Nursing in Schoolfield Mill Village: Cotton and Welfare; Development of an Industrial Nursing Specialty; The Southern Cotton Textile Industry: 1880-1930; Culture, Work, and Health in Southern Textile Mill Villages; Establishing Trust; An Unsafe Environment; A Need for Improved Nutrition; Focus on Safety; Practicing to the Full Extent of Their Education; Health Promotion and Disease Prevention; Schoolfield Village, Dan River Mills, Virginia; Conclusion; Notes.
  • Chapter 5: Care in the Coal Fields: Promoting Health Through Sanitation and NutritionFrom Mountaineers to Miners; Coal Company Care; Health Care Aboveground and Underground; Nurses in the Coal Fields; Koppers Nurses Improve Access to Care; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 6: Mary Breckinridge and the Frontier Nursing Service: Saddlebags and Swinging Bridges; Roots of the Frontier Nursing Service; A Rural Nurse-Midwifery Service is Born; Rural Health Model; Challenges of a Rural Nurse-Midwifery Service; Advantages of the Rural Setting; Living and Working in Impoverished Mountain Communities.
  • Using the Full Extent of KnowledgeConclusion; Notes; Chapter 7: Migrant Nursing in the Great Depression: Floods, Flies, and the Farm Security Administration; The Great Depression and the Dust Bowl; The Ditch Camps; Promoting Health; Government "Suitcase Camps"; Practicing at the Full Extent of Their Education; Gaining Trust; Following the Crops; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 8: Nursing in West Texas: Trains, Tumbleweeds, and Rattlesnakes; Exploring the Pecos; Ranching and the Railroad; Texas Tea; The Early West Texas Oil Industry; Roughnecks and Rattlesnakes; "Like a War Zone"; An Offer Accepted.